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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  January 18, 2013 7:00am-8:59am EST

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good morning. it's friday, january 18th, 2013. welcome to "cbs this morning." lance armstrong tells oprah he didn't think doping was cheating. we'll talk with his former teammate and scott pelley looks at what armstrong left out of his confession. chaos and bloodshed in the sahara desert. >> the manti te'o hoax gets more confusing. we're at notre dame this morning. plus we'll ask james brown if te'o's nfl future is in jeopardy. >> but we begin this morning's "eye opener", your world in 90
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seconds. >> in all seven tour de france victories, did you ever take banned substances or blood dope? >> yes. >> lance armstrong confesses to a career of doping and deceit. >> i mean it's just this mythic perfect story and it wasn't true. >> did it feel wrong? >> no. scary. >> it was cold. it was calculating. it was like he did everything but pick his teeth. >> after what you've done to me, done to my family, now we're supposed to believe you? >> sources in algeria say a united states aircraft has arrived to evacuate americans. >> there's still problems here. how many americans have escaped or have been rescued. >> terrorists should be on notice. those who attack our people will have no place to hide. >> manti publicly mourns. >> had an imaginary girlfriend
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but in his defense, brent muss burger said she was really hot. >> the man who died the day after he won the lottery will be exhumed today. investigators determined he was poisoned. horrifying attack on a subway platform. he picks her up and tosses her right onto the tracks. she manages to run away. this gold nugget reported in australia worth just under $300,000. celebrating her birthday with a new hairdo. >> the word is out bangs are here. why is the dog here. >> and all that matters. i'll spend the rest of my life trying to earn back trust and apologize to people for the rest of my sflief life. >> on "cbs this morning." >> here's the thing. wherever a tear landed, a new muscle grew. captioning funded by cbs
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welcome to "cbs this morning." nearly 14 years after first winning the race that turned him into a superstar, lance armstrong has admitted lying about using performance-enhancing drugs. >> in an interview that aired last night armstrong told oprah that he began doping in the 1990s but he stopped before his come back two years later. chip reid has the highlights from armstrong's confession. chip, good morning. >> good morning. after years of defy andly denying performance drugs, he considered it part of his job, kind of like his regimen, like putting air in his bike tires or filling up his water bottle. >> i viewed the situation as one big lie that i repeated a lot of times. >> lance armstrong told the world last night exactly how he cheated his way to seven tour de
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france titles. in an interview with oprah winfrey he laid out his cocktail of choice, blood transfusions, testosterone and the blood bestbest er booster epo. he said he kept up the lies for more than a decade because he was caught up in his own legacy, american hero, family man, and cancer survivor. >> all the fault and all the blame falls on me but behind that picture and story is momentum, and whether it's fans or whether it's the media or whether -- it just gets going and i lost myself in all that. >> despite his hunger for victory, armstrong denied claims by teammates that he threatened those who didn't want to dope. >> i'm not the most believable guy in the world right now, i understand, but i did not do that. >> but he admitted that he demanded to have things his way. >> were you a bully?
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>> yeah. yeah, i was a bully. >> tell me how you were a bully. >> i was a bully in the sense that i tried to control the narrative and if i didn't like what somebody said for whatever reasons in my own head, whether i viewed that as somebody being disloyal or a friend turning on you, i tried to control that. i said that's a lie, they're liars. >> armstrong said he regrets he did not come clear last year when the anti-doping agency gave him the chance. >> oprah, i'd do anything, anything to go back to that day. >> after the interview they released a statement saying tonight lance armstrong finally acknowledged that his cycling career was built on a powering combination of doping and deceit. but if he is insincere in his desire to correct his past mistakes he will testify under oath about his doping activities. the 41-year-old said he is now
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only beginning to understand the scope of his lies. >> i'll spend the rest of my life trying to earn back trust and apologize people for the rest of my life. >> armstrong preetedly refused to name names or implicate anyone else in the scandal. he told oprah he thought he would get away with cheating last year after the federal government tropped its criminal investigation but the anti-doping agency then launched its own investigation of armstrong which resulted in over 1,000 pages of damaging evidence. charlie and norah? >> he testified before the anti-doping agency. welcome. >> thanks for having me. >> what's your reaction to what he said, and did he go far enough? >> well, it's certainly a good first step, and, you know, to come forward like that publicly
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is -- you know, it's positive. but he's got to go to usada, the world's anti-doping agency, and really get into the details. you know, the reason for that is that in order for those details or what, you know, help develop new tests and prove anti-doping for the next generation of professional riders. >> was he telling the truth as he saw it? >> it's -- you know, it's hard to say. there's a lot of stories intertwined in there. i think that sometimes it takes -- it takes a while, and it takes being asked those questions a few times and getting more and more comfortable with just letting it
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out. you know, when you guard a secret that long, it takes a while to let it go. >> i want to get specific about some of the things he said in this interview. he denied ever threatening teammates. is that truthful? >> you know, he was an immensely intimidating person, and he was held by such high regard and such an icon in the sport. and when someone's in that position, if they look cross-eyed at you, you know, you're worried about it. >> he also said -- he told oprah he didn't think what he did wrong and he had to go to the dictionary to look up what "cheater" was. >> i can tell you, again, if you go to like, you know, the guys who are racing now and if you ask them, you know, if they think doping is wrong, their answer's going to be absolutely yes. it's not even a second thought for them. but that's taken a lot of time
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and a lot of effort to get, you know, professional cycling to shift that mentality that way. >> part of the reason you're here, right, you are trying to change cycling for the better. >> yeah, absolutely. i mean it has to happen. it has to happen. you know -- >> how does that start? >> you know, i retired when i was 29 years old, which should have been the peak of micy care. and the reason i retired is i had doped, and i was driven insane by the constant decision of should i/shouldn't i, should i/shouldn't i. and when i stopped, you know, and i had to step away from the sport. that's the only way for me to get out. >> what's the hardest thing for him to do now in his own mind? >> in his own mind i think is going to be to dig dune littowne
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deeper and like i said under oath. that's going to be -- that's going to be an effort without a doubt. >> all right. jonathan vaughters. thank you for coming in. we appreciate it. in 2011 after a six-month investigation it was "60 minutes" that broke the story of lance armstrong's doping. scott pelley and hamill tin. he talked about how he used backed substances including epo and testosterone and he talked about armstrong telling him he failed a test in 2001. after it was on the air, armstrong supporters complained bitterly and demanded an on-air apolo apology. scott pelley, good morning. >> good morning. >> you saw the interview last night. he didn't come completely clean. what was it? >> it wasn't a tell-all but it was a tell-a lot.
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one thing that struck me, norah, was the way he described doping as air in our tires and water in our bottles. these substances in many cases are controlled substances. this is not air and water we're talking about. one thing that the u.s. anti-doping agency was talking about is how were these drugs obtained, how were they distributed, how were they carried across state lines and inter national borders. y usada describes it as drug trafficking, and one of the things he didn't talk about very much was how elaborate and complex this all was. >> you just heard someone say he's an intimidating guy. he said he was a bully. but you have heard people say it's much more severe than that. >> it's amazing the lengths he would go to according to some of the witnesses who were testifying against him over time, particularly testifying against him before that federal
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grand jury. le levi's wife said he got a text that said run, don't walk. >> after an interview, he met one of them in the bar and put his hand on his chest and said we're going to make your life a living hell. he came out fighting and a lot came from the heat. >> he said because he won over cancer he felt like he had to be the most competitive person in the world. >> that right. that's right. that's one of the reasons that i personally hate all of this. it was such a great story, such a story of gallantry, that the world could get behind a man who got over a terrible disease and he was one of the greatest athletes of all time and it
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turned out to be a lie. >> it was two years ago that you and "60 minutes" broke the story. you got a lot of criticism at that time including from arm stromg's camp and whole team. >> absolutely. we received threatening letters, telephone calls, don't go wrong, you're going to regret this, all kinds of stuff. but there were just too many witnesses, too many people coming forward and talking to us and talking to the anti-doping ajepcy and telling what they knew. >> if doping was not part of cycling, would armstrong have been a winner? would he have been competitive? would he have won if nobody was using dope? >> if nobody was using dope? he was a great athlete, but tra advice tygart, the head of the anti-doping agency, we asked him the question you just did and he said there wouldn't be seven
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tour de france wins. lance armstrong said last night he would not be successful without doping. he also said it was a level playing field because everybody was doing sniet that is his argument. >> that is his argument. one of the things tyler hamilton told us is it wasn't a level playing field because lance armstrong's doping plan was so well financed. he had much more money and therefore could do it more than anyone. >> thank you. >> thank you. now to the hostage crisis in the sahara desert. they're threatening more attacks and some americans are being evacuated from algeria. defense secretary leon panetta says up to eight americans were being held. mark phillips is in london. mark, good morning. >> good morning, charlie and norah. there's late-breaking new this morning on aftrica's command.
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they say 10 to 20 passengers most of them thought to be americans but other nationalities as well. they're being ferreted out. some have injuries. we're told they'll be given medical treatment en route and dropped at military hospitals in europe. this follows the assault on the gas plant yesterday where hostages are still being held. there's still a great deal, of cours course, that is still unclear. hostages, reportedly more than 44 were being held. the fire began as some of the captives were being moved. the algerians feared the hostages were being taken away. the assault, though, was not the end of the incident. british prime minister david cameron provided the latest information and not much more this morning. >> when i spoke with the
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algerian prime minister late last night he told us the first step was complete but this is a large and complex site and they here still reviewing terrorists and other hostages within the site. >> leon panetta says they're still trying to determine the fate of the u.s. citizens, originally thought to be around e seven or achlt in the meantime he issued this warning. >> terrorists should be on notice. that they will find no sanctuary, no refuge. not in algeria, not in north africa, not anywhere. >> and it clears the crisis is still going on. a large number of hostages from a number of countries frrks britain or from the states, of course, japan, from norway, and from others is still unaccounted for. the government of that country
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very angry for having launched an assault and of course the group that carry out the attack said it will do more. charlie, norah? >> mark phillips, thank you. and as president obama gets ready to start his second term this morning, the latest cbs/"new york times" poll says 51% of americans approve of what he's doing. 41% disapprove. it's higher than a year ago but less than last month. he has a new official portrait. the white house released it this morning. the photo was takeen in the oval office in early december. and we'll all be in washington on monday with three hours. we'll bring you complete live coverage beginning at 10:00 a.m. eastern time and continuing throughout the day. >> it's going to be fun. it's time to show you reports from "usa today."
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dreamliner will remain problems until problems with its batteries can be resolved. its lithium ion bat erreys pack more power, but they're known to overheat. >> "the wall street journal" says house republicans are considering a short term debt increase in the limit. that right. if the increase is not approved, the government will run auto of money next month. republicans say a short-term solution will give them more time to win budget cuts. that's my most interesting piece in the paper today. the philadelphia paper reports on a vicious subway attack. surveillance shows a man punching a woman and throwing her onto the tracks. she was able to climb back safely onto the platform. he was arrested. the police do not have a motive. too many of these stories. >> i agree. the nhl will jam 720 games
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into a 90-day stretch. it's due to a shorter season due to a lockout that ended last week. the winter storm buried the region. there's snow on the ground from tennessee to virginia where more than a foot of snow fell in some areas. tens of >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by the florida department of citrus.
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the mystery that has rattled college football grows. we'll show you what notre dame football player manti te'o said after he learned it was an online hoax and what it could mean for his future. and a surprise from american airlines. >> i imagine there are some of you who might have expected a different press conference this morning. >> american is proud of the company's new makeover, but some of its employees are puzzled.
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peter greenberg asks ceo hornburg about changing some of its looks while it's still in bankruptcy on "cbs this morning." this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by capella university. nurses are dealing with a wider range of issues. and there are ever-changing regulations. when you see these challenges, do you want to back away or take charge? with a degree in the field of healthcare or nursing from capella university, you'll have the knowledge to advance your career while making a difference in the lives of patients. let's get started at capella.edu. because she thinks it's too dark,
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that's right. manti te'o's girlfriend was a complete fabrication. when they heard that, the nerds said even they like imaginary girls. >> this story involving notre dame football star manti te'o.
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there are new questions today about why he kept the truth from the public after learning that his late girlfriend never existed.
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this firefighter in siberia was trying to rescue people from a burning parent building yesterday. look at this huge chunk of snow fell on him sending him tumbling down the ladder. another firefighter came to his rescue and a third saved the people inside the building, including a toddler. there were no reported injuries. that's incredible. welcome back, everybody, to "cbs this morning." there are new details and questions this morning surrounding manti te'o. he's the notre dame football star, the runner-up for the heisman trophy who told a heart-wrenching story about a girlfriend who died. >> the girlfriend turned out to be fictional but the fallout
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could be very real. dean reynolds is outside indiana. dean, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie and norah. without question the saga of the notre dame linebacker is the talk of this campus. the virtual love affair that manti te'o conducted with a young stanford co-ed blew up this week after sports blog "deadspin" reported the girl never existed. te'o said he learned of the hoks on december 6 when he found that the girl lene kekua called him and time him she was alived a conversation that supposedly unnerved him. but on at least two occasions afterward he furthered the fix of the dead girlfriend to reporters. >> i really got hit with cancer. i don't like cancer. lost it my grandparents and girlfriend to cancer. >> reporter: te'o didn't tell
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notre dame about it for 20 more day bus the school rallied to his side, rallied to "deadspin," denying he was on a pain oh emotion. >> the pain was real, the affection was real and that's the nature of this sad cruel game. >> reporter: te'o, the school said, is really an impressionable young man who was taken by people who duped him just for the fun of it. on notre dame's campus students had mixed reactions. >> it just sounds sort of strange and i guess we're waiting to see what's going to come of this. >> seems like there's something not being said. i don't know what. >> reporter: now notre dame says ultimately it's manti te'o's story to tell and he will tell it but they don't know when yet. >> let's bring in james brown, host of "nfl today." good morning. >> good morning, charlie and norah. >> we do not know all the
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details, but if, in fact, he is complicit in all this, will it affect his nfl future? >> it all depends on what his explanation is, charlie. i spoke with a well recruited ex-scout who said the big three that would raise the bigsest flag for nfl teams are abuse of women, drugs, and multiple arrests. in this case here it doesn't speak well of him if he's complicit. but the question is why. he's got enough time now before the combine in indianapolis when all of the top rookies will be there and he's going to be interviewed by those teams interest in him. it will be a much longer and critical interview that takes place to understand why. >> he was expected to be a first round draft pick in april. georgia b, does he have to speak out as quickly as possible to get this behind him? >> certainly, truthfully and honestly, norah, those are the key words he has to say when he does speak out because there are financial considerations. if he is a first round draft
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choice, a time has to make a very critical condition. there's a limited pool of money set aside for rookies, and if he's a first round draft pick and they're going invest a certain amount of money on him, they want to make sure they're getting incentive. that won't hurt him too much from the people with whom i've talked. if there's more to it, yes, that could hurt him in terms of his draft stock dropping and of course impacting his wallet. >> let's talk about the games this weekend. the afc champion between the patriots and the ravens on cbs. what will you will looking for? >> good story going into this, norah. you have the baltimore ravens. they've got if not one of the oildest defenses in the league led by ray lewis who's going to wrap it up after a 17-year career. they go into new england with the swagger. they beat them earlier this season. look, they're a tough team.
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joe flacco is playing well. he wants to prove he's a big-time quarterback. but new england making at the right time. tom brady, it begins and ends with him. bill belicheck has got players marching up and playing well and on defense i love the term injolgy they use. vince wulford ohlford is a big truck. >> brady always peaking. >> he has it all, doesn't he? >> yeah. j.b., thank you. >> i'll have charlie skpounld on that with you. >> and j.b. will bring you th"t nfl today" at 3:00 p.m. followed by the champion game the baltimore ravens and patriots who are speaking. that's right here on cbs. and will a new coat of paint fall on the american airmens workers? we'll see.
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the workers aren't exactly taking off with celebration. we'll show you why when "cbs this morning" continues on this friday morning. >> i can't wait. [ female announcer ] mcdonald's dollar menu.
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american airlines is undergoing a surprise makeover. some of the people who are keeping the airlines flying through chapter 11 are wondering if the company has its priorities straight. travel editor peter greenberg spoke one on one with american's boss. >> i imagine there are some of you who might have expected a different press conference this morning. >> reporter: when american airlines ceo tom horton appeared before the press conference he didn't announce they were under bankruptcy. instead he reveal add new logo and a bold new plan to rebrand
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the airline. >> we started with our entire fleet of airplanes. >> reporter: the extensive effort includes painting more than 600 plains, 550 of them brand new. there will be new kiosks at the airport, all new uniforms, new cuisine for passengers and advanced technology for the flight attendants. >> reporter: this is a strategic image on your part to change the airlines. >> it is. but it's more about that. it's creating a more modern travel plan for our customers. all of the things we've been doing have led up to that. >> moist surpriseed by the announcement were the employees who recently agreed to contract concessions. >> they're talking about blowing up this new airline for their customers and that's all good, but it's only putting fresh
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payment on a house with bad foundation. >> a foundation fraught with a bankruptcy filing of 2011en and bitter negotiations that go back years with the carrier's ground workers, pilots, and flight attendants. >> and what do they want from you? >> oh, everything. i testified in court by saying, if you want to shoot us in the head, shoot us in the head but don't hand us the gun and ask us to do it ourselves. >> to make thinks more complicated. horton is dealing with the merg merger. >> after seeing what they proposed, i thought this is absolutely the way we have to go both for us airways and for american to survive and compete. >> for two years american airlines was covertly managing a major relaunch of its own brand. it includes painting planes like this one inside a secret hangar in victorville, california.
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when somebody says to you you put paint on a plane and redid the logo, but that may not be enough. >> there's so much in terms of getting our structure in line and then building for the future. >> reporter: merger and new image aside 2012 was a transformative year for horton. annual revenues were the best in company history at $25 billion. they hired 1,500 new flight attendants and came to terms with pilots who late last year went against the airlines that required in delays and cancellations. >> you can go back to the judge and say we can come out of bankruptcy. >> that's right. we're at the tail end of the bankruptcy process. and the company is very poised to go ahead. >> reporter: still, labor isn't
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come vinced. >> do you have any confidence left in the american management team? >> i hate to say it, but i don't know -- i'm willing to listen. i'm always willing to listen. >> that wasn't my question. >> yeah. i guess i can -- not right now i don't, no. i really don't. >> peter greenberg is here. is this merger going to tareck place? >> it's looking more and more look it will. it's not a question of whether it will come out of bankruptcy. it is. the one thick that will remain the same. it will still be called american. that one they're stuck with. >> what does it cost to paint each one of these planes. >> about
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the afc championship will put one family to the test. it's brother verssus brother trying to make it to the super bowl. you'll meet them and their parents next on "cbs this morning." people don't realize that taxes and health care are connected. the affordable care act means big changes this year... when you file your taxes. i read the whole 900 pages.
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i took my son fishing every year. we had a great spot, not easy to find, but worth it. but with copd making it hard to breathe, i thought those days might be over. so my doctor prescribed symbicort. it helps significantly improve my lung function starting within five minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. with symbicort, today i'm breathing better. and that means...fish on! symbicort is for copd including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. with copd, i thought i'd miss our family tradition. now symbicort significantly improves my lung function, starting within 5 minutes. and that makes a difference in my breathing. today, we're ready for whatever swims our way. ask your doctor about symbicort. i got my first prescription free. call or click to learn more. [ male announcer ] if you can't afford your medication,
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astrazeneca may be able to help. the last stop before super bowl xlvii is the conference matchups. there's sib ilg rivalry. as lee cowan shows us, no matter the final score, it will be an emotional game for the jones family. they were once college teammates but brothers arthur and chandler jones will find themselves on opposite sides. >> it will be a great experience to be playing opposite my brother. i'm truly blessed. >> i'm not going to tell you this game is personal. it's very personal. >> their parents from endicott,
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new york, will cheer for both sons. >> reporter: what's it going to be like? >> there's going to be pressure. >> reporter: camille jones who went blind from complications of diabetes years ago still goes by pet names. chandler's comes from his childhood. >> he's my little smurf. i say it on national tv. i call him my cuddly wuddly bare. he says you can't call me that. i'm the dog. >> reporter: arthur remembers her public use of names. >> buggy, sugary, baby bare. i don't know. looking back, i appreciate it. >> reporter: they're not the only professional athletes in
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the family. middle brother john is a top ranked mixed martial arts fighter. their father a church pastor doesn't take credibility. >> people ask me how do i get three sons who are athletes. say it's god. >> reporter: their older sister carmen died of cancer just before she turned 18. >> they love heard dearly. she loved them. i'm sure she would be so proud of them. >> reporter: sunday one of the jones brothers will move onto the super bowl, but to the family, both are already champions. for "cbs this morning," elaine quijano, endicott, new york. >> it goes without saying, great story. >> wonderful parents. i love their mother. she's a doll. good luck to them, although they're on opposite sides. >> it's a win/win for the family. >> it's a win/win for the family. and the nation says good-bye to a dear friend. we remember the woman known as dear abby who always had a
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solution to our life's problems. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by silk. try silk on your cereal. it's the taste most people prefer over dairy milk. you said, "big vitamins are hard to take." at nature made, we said,
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good morning to you. it's 8:00. welcome back to "cbs this morning." lance armstrong says he was a doper, but he's not accusing anyone else. we'll hear what cycling fans around the world are saying about his confession. and studio 54. do you remember that? it was disco's most famous nightclub. we'll show you the memorabilia that's going up for auction tomorrow. but first here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> i view the situation as one big lie. >> reporter: after years of defiantly denying doping charge, armstrong admits that not only
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did he use perform-enhancing drugs throughout his career, he considered it part of his job. >> it wasn't a tell-all. but it was a tell-allot. one of things he didn't talk about is how elaborate and complex and well organized it was. now to the complex issue in algeria. >> they're evacuating. >> a large number of hoss teenages are still accounted for. officials say he will tell it. >> there are new questions today about why he kept the truth from the public after learning that his late girlfriend never existed. >> will it affect his nfl future? >> it all depends. >> what does it cost to repaint the planes? >> 800 thousand for 787s and 650,000 for 777s. >> brady. >> he has it all, doesn't he? >> yeah. >> when you guard a secret that
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long, it takes a while to let it go. >> after being stripped of all hiss tour de france wins lance armstrong was told he had to give back his olympic bronze medal and tomorrow even worse they're going to take away his latin grammy. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. for lance armstrong his big lie is over. his confession to oprah winfrey aired last night. >> armstrong says he began taking performance-enhancing drugs in the mid-90s. he said he did not consider it cheating. to him it was leveling the playing field. >> did you ever blood dope or use blood transfusions to enhance your cycling performance? >> yes. >> did you ever use any other banned substances like testosterone, cortisone, or human growth hormone? >> yes. >> yes or no, in all seven of your tour de france victories,
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did you ever take banned substances or blood dope? >> yes. >> in your opinion, was it humanly possible to win the tour de france without doping seven times in a row? >> not in my opinion. >> i thought it was interesting that she started the interview with the yes and no questions right off the bat to get him to answer however he chose, and the very first question, did you cheat, yeah. >> almost like a prosecutor going through all these questions. >> good to know. >> you have to tell oprah yes or no right hero. your time has come. >> he said he looked up the definition of "cheating" and even after looking up the definition of cheating in his mind he didn't think it was cheating. >> he doesn't seem to express regret in some instance about what he did, sort of justifying that it was what everybody else was doing. >> it reminds me of the question
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i asked oprah, was he contrite, and she deferred answering. >> i think him doing the interview means he wanted to express con tigers. >> what has the reaction for oprah been? >> the rehalifaction has been v well. i think they're pretty good. you can see the interview tonight on own. check out your local listings. armstrong admitted to taking drugs for all of his seven tour de france victories. in france news of his confession was not that surprising but it did strike a nerve. charlie d'agata is in paris. charlie, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. behind me is the finishing line for the tour de france where lance armstrong made history now for all the wrong reasons. this morning here everyone has an opinion on armstrong ranging from disappointment to disgust.
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it may have been shown in the dead of night here, but lance armstrong finally coming clean about riding dirty came as big news if not much of a shock. >> he's admitted cheating in all seven tour de france races. >> lance armstrong opens up to oprah about the cheating scandal. >> reporter: nowhere is that sense of betrayal felt more deeply than in france where cycling verges on a religion and armstrong committed his sins. despite his youthful appearance alexander rouse has been covering it for years. >> reporter: he lied. he cheated. doesn't that tear the heart out of france? >> yes, yes, of course. i mean he did for seven years. that's a blank from 1999 to
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2005. that's snag will stay on the history of the tour de france. >> reporter: forever. >> forever. >> reporter: fellow teammates say he has no place among them. >> he cheated the sport. >> reporter: speaking ahead of the interview, current champion bradley wigan said arm strong's critics finally got their man but it's time to move on. >> it will be great day for a lot of people and a sad day for the sport in some ways. i think it's been a sad couple of months for this sport. >> reporter: now, writing off those races is exactly what your officials here want to do. they're treating his wins as if they didn't exist, and one french commentator said if lance armstrong is looking for sympathy, he won't find any here. >> all right. charlie d'agata, thank you. family friends and admirers are saying good-bye to the original
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dear abby. pauline phillips died wednesday in minneapolis. for 45 years she offered advice, wisdom and snappy comments in one of america's most popular columns now written by her daughter. jan crawford looks back at her long and influential career. >> her pen name was abigail van buren but to family and friends she was just dear abby. here she is in 1958 with ed murrow in "person to person." >> all kinds of people write to me, ed, because everyone has a problem. >> reporter: they wrote thousands of letters to dear abby, the despondent, the lonely, and confused. she was the wise friend and sounding board and in some ways ahead of her time as in this response to up in arms in san francisco, a worried reader about the gay couple living across the street.
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ab abby, need we're does are wrecking the neighborhood. abby's response, you could move. >> how do you come up with the answers to these important questions? >> well, ed. as my good friend says, horse heads can be found in a stable mind. >> reporter: she first appeared in "the san francisco chronicle" in 1956. at the time a suburban housewife from iowa with no writing experience, phillips convinced the paper's editor that she could do a better job than the person who already had the job. >> when you think of what the '50s were like with the ideal e idealized version of america, here's dear abby saying it's tock have problems because everybody has problems. >> reporter: dear abby became a cultural touchstone appearing in more than 1,400 newspapers and reaching 110 million readers. >> you could very easily compare
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her to oprah. she was a one-name brand. >> reporter: but for years sibling rivalry created a list between her and her twin sister, an landers. eventually they would make up. dear abby died wednesday after a long battle with alzheimer's. she was 94. for "cbs this morning," jan crawford, washington, d.c. >> like what she said. good old horse sense. and everybody has problems an everybody wants somebody to listen to them.
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bad cough can last a whole lot longer than a cold or a flu. we'll show you why it usually doesn't pay to go back to the doctor. next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this morning's eye opener at 8:00 brought to you by sponsor, with an inside story on shingles. and the doctor said, cindie, you have shingles. he said, you had chickenpox when you were a little girl... i said, yes, i did. i don't think anybody ever thinks they're going to get shingles. but it happened to me.
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the first jazz concert ever give at the metropolitan house in new york. ♪ i'll get by as long as i have you ♪ >> that's lady day, at the metropolitan opera house in 1944. she was the first black woman ever to perform on that stage. welcome back to "cbs this morning." >> for most people when they think of billy holiday they think of "lady sings the blues"
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with diana ross. this morning we're learning that cold and flu patients need to be, well, more patient. good morning. today on "healthwatch," how long should a cough last? after enjoying a week or so of a hacking cough most of us feel like it should be over, but it turns out that needs the case. new data shows the average duration of an acute cough is almost three weeks and most people finding it hard to wait so long. researchers revealeder er. ed from 19 studies. they found the average cold or flu is more than 17 days. they then surveyed 500 adults and found that most of them thought a cough should last more like seven to nine days. the difference between what we think a cough should laugh and when it does is significant. they tend to go to the doctor
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for antibiotics. most cases of acute cough are caused by viruses, not bacteria, the antibiotics won't help anyway. of course, there are times to see your doctor for a cough, particularly if you've got shortness of breath, wheezing, coughing up blood or suddenly feeling worse. but for most of us, time and chicken soup is still the best remedy. i'm dr. holly phillips. >> reporter: cbs "healthwatch" sponsored by breathe right. don't let a stuffy nose get between you and your sleechlt it's your right to breathe right. my medicine alone doesn't always give me all the congestion relief i need to sleep. [ female announcer ] adding breathe right nasal strips can make all the difference. it's proven to instantly relieve cold or flu nasal congestion. [ stefan ] and because it's drug free, it's safe to use with any medicine to relieve my nighttime stuffy nose. so i can breathe better and sleep better.
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[ female announcer ] go to breatheright.com for special offers. [ female announcer ] go to breatheright.com maybmaybe you can't.re; when you have migraines with fifteen or more headache days a month, you miss out on your life. you may have chronic migraine. go to mychronicmigraine.com to find a headache specialist. and don't live a maybe life.
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the prosecutorsrested their case in the murder of jod
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jody arias. she has changed her original story. >> i heard a really loud pop and the next thing i remember i was lying next to the bathtub and travis was screaming. >> this is jody arias describing in 2008 how her ex-boyfriend travis was murdered in cold blood during a home invasion and how she managed to barely escape with her life. >> i ran out of there and left him there. >> now four years later it's jody arias on trial for the very same murder fighting for her life in the courtroom. our interview with jody shortly after her arrest has become so important to the case that it will be played for the jury at her murder trial. >> it just was so unreal. it was like a movie unfolding, a horrible movie.
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>> but what has captured the attention and imagination of the public are jody's own admissions that she and travis had a sexual encounter the day of the murder and recorded their exploits on a digital camera found at the crime scene. >> and it still had the digital card in it. what we found was a series of photos. >> reporter: this detective bleebs those time-stamped photos reveal a murder. >> there were several photos which were out of focus, dark. those photos were of the victim during the time he was being killed. i had obvious proof in my hands she was here on the day he was murdered. >> since her arrest jody has maintained inoi sense, but when her trial began two weeks ago jody's attorneys shocked them with a new theory. she now claims that she killed travis in self-defense in a relationship marred by continual abuse. >> and on june 4th of 2008, it
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had reached a point of no return. travis left jody no other options but to defend herself. >> but after telling so many lies, would a jury believe her? >> i know i won't be the first person to be wrongly convicted and possibly wrongly sentenced for either prison or the death penalty. personally i would take the death penalty because i don't want to spend the rest of my life in prison. >> maureen maher is here. maureen, are your interviews going to come into play in this trial? >> they already have. the prosecution had a problem with a detective. the detective has changed his story, the defense has changed their story, so the defense on cross of the detective mentioned that the interview he did with us, he had another story. so he had to admit he was wrong at first. now we may see during the defense that the prosecution that if jody takes the stand,
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they'll reference and use our tapes during the trial itself. >> all right, maureen. good to see you. thanks for coming. you can sigh aj wo up with ts horrle sh on right sid
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welcome back to "cbs this morning." it's time to show you this morning's headlines from around the globe. "the wall street journal" reports on scientific research subjects. researchers report in the journal of science that they could feed nearly 50 people who took part in genetic research. that research stored in databases and it's supposed to be anonymous. >> daily times says robert wagner will not answer questions in the latest investigation of the death of his wife natalie wood. wood was on a boat off the coast of california when she drowned in 1981. her death was ruled and accident
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but the case has been reopened and police say wagner was the only person on the boat that night who's refusing to talk with investigators. "the new york times" says barge traffic is still running on the mississippi river despite a severe drought that left boats stranded. the only way is to dredge and scrape away rock obstructions along a river bed. "usa today" says hotels are taking extra precautions to deal with this flu outbreak. some are offering chicken soup to sick guests that are stuck in their rooms. not bad idea. others are stouking up on hand sanitizers and tissues. and "the boston globe" says curt shiling is selling the infachls bloody sock as the red sox won the 2004 world series. he needs the money to help pay off millions of dollars in loans after his video game company collapsed. the sock is expected to collect more than $100,000 at the
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auction next month. >> i would like to know who would buy that. a used bloody sock. >> it's the red sox. we have just seen lance armstrong admit to using performance-enhancing drugs. should we believe it? we have the expert on spying. >> co-author of "spy the lie." good morning. >> thanks for having me back. >> you watched the interview last night. what were your impressions? >> we did watch it. one of things that stood out the most is despite lance's no holds barred agreement with oprah, his behaviors indicated he really didn't come clean on all the questions and issues that were posed to him by oprah. >> what specifically? >> there were several -- for example there were a couple of questions he refused to answer and then there were others where he was very evasive, for example, asking why are you
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confessing, why are you doing this. and then when asked about details of the doping and so forth, he was very evasive. and then there were some questions where his behavior suggests that he's outright not telling the truth. for example when he was asking the question had he threatened christian -- >> i thought scott pelley said it very well last hour. he said he told a lot -- i mean he didn't tell all but he told a lot, but we have a clip of the intimidation you're talking about. let's see the clip. >> christian vanderbilt told usada that you threatened to kick him off the team if he didn't shape up and conform to the doping program. >> that's not true. tere was a level of expectation, we expected guys to be fit, to be strong, to
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perform. i certainly didn't. >> what do you see there? >> there's a sizeable cluster there, gayle. first he laugh, what the behavioralist calls duping it. then we see that as part of a longer delay in which he clearly seems to be crafting, you know, what's an acceptable or palpable answer. it's funny. he punctuated that answer. it's not on the clip there. with something we call truth in the lie. he made an interesting statement. he said i'm not terribly believable right now and that probably is a true statement on that particular issue. >> can some people just be nervous though? >> absolutely, absolutely. >> how do you tell the difference between i'm a little nervous and i'm lying. >> right. we confine our analysis, gayle, to the response to the question
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as o posed to -- >> is there any analysis as to what they do? >> no, we another looking at the tone of voice, no. >> i'm interested in the specifics. what about the things that he did, his body language that spoke to you where you can tell whether he's being deceptive or not? >> a number of things, norah. one in particular. he has a tendency to go to his face or head region and that's sim willy the old fight or flight response kicking in where you're getting a rush of blood away from your head and he's creating an itching sensation. you see him rubbing his upper lip or he scratches his head or things of that nature. >> was there any question that you thought he should have been asked? >> yes, absolutely. i thought oprah did great job of holding his feet to the fire with a series of yes-or-no
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questions. one thing i would have loved to have seen is what else. what other things did you do or what other performance-enhancing drugs did you experiment with or utilize. >> i thought he admitted to all of them. >> well, he admitted to all of the ones she asked about. >> are there more? >> that's what we don't know. in that series of questions. >> kind of an open-ended question, is there anything else you haven't told us, sir? >> that's what's in the book. we'll see. we'll see. we go now to studio 57 where we are to studio 54 where disco was king in the late 1970s. and studio 54 was its plachlts tomorrow artwork from the legendary nightclub will be auctioned off. some of the people who worked at studio 54 remember it as a place that was larger than life. >> i remember thinking, oh, man, this is the photo that represents this auction.
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♪ ah freak-out >> the year was 1977. studio 54 was the world's most disco club. he reigned over it. >> established it like a show. >> determining who was in and who was out. >> oh, you're not shaved. there's no way i'm letting you in. it doesn't matter. you're not shaved. just go home. >> you had to be really core ranges to go stand in line. i mean who had the nerve to even do that. >> reporter: west palm beach rico baca will get to relive history tomorrow. >> this is the invitation to the thousand days. >> reporter: when he auctions off thousands of items of memorabilia from large-scale artwork to complimentary drink tickets. baca says it's this item, the registered book, that provides
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the most fascinating insight into how the world's most famous disco was run. >> chris christopherson, andy give, rita coolidge. this must have been a blast sniet was the strobe lights of the stars. liza minnelli, andy warhol, but having a bold-faced name didn't always gain entrance. before that it was an opera house. before that a cbs broadcast center. >> steven would be in the disk jk business at 2:00 in morning and say tomorrow night we're going to have a party for elizabeth taylor. >> he had party planners to help trans40s it into disco heaven and make the stars the centerpiece. reynolds' first party trick,
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hiring the's why horse bianca jagger rode in on. >> the next day that photograph was on every cover and every newspaper around the world. >> he said it wasn't just the booze that kept it going. >> one of the backdrops was the huge moon with the nose. when the lights went off, the moon came down and the lights came on. that was your signal to go get high. >> drugs, poppers were literally in the air. >> steve rubell would buy them by the case and drop them into the ventilation system. >> it was a massive pleasure seeking that was unbridled. >> then fashion model remembered studio 54 not as a place of exclusion but inclusion. >> few f yif you were gay you w invited.
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if you were black, you were embraced. all the bebarriers were broken >> then he was arrested on tax evasion. >> we call it the thousand days of fame because there was a thousand days when he and steven had it, and those thousand days are incredible, irreplaceable, and unforgettable. >> but not quite priceless. this andy warhol polaroid of steven rubell is expected to fetch over 5 grand. >> i wish i had a camera in my pocket. i'd be a millionaire by now. >> i say take out the cocaine and spoon part and that looks like a good party. i love the disco music. >> exactly. i'm struck by the massive pleasure seeking that was unbridled. i mean that's how i feel about studio 57. >> i love the word "unbridled."
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primal. yes, i get it. do you have anything to say? >> no, no. >> i would think you would have known about it. >> no. i would have gone. i just -- >> oh. speaking of parties, washington is have a lot of them for the president's inauguration. we'll have ken davis about sol of the traditions. he k
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the only thing we have to fear is fear itself. >> ask not what your country can do for you. ask what you can do for your country. >> in this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problems. government is the problem. >> well, my fellow americans, this is our time.
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let us embrace it. >> we must pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and begin again the work of remaking america. >> president obama will give his second inaulg real address on monday after the pomp. the inauguration day wasn't always so elaborate. kenneth c. davis looks back at the history and tradition of the oath of office. good morning. >> good morning. office a pleasure. >> yes. all right. why does inauguration take place on january 20th? that was not always the case. >> that's correct. it was originally march 4th although washington took it on april 29th, but that's another story. it was moving to january 20th because the time between the inauguration and election was too long. there was the crisis when lincoln was elected. another was in 1933. we saw roosevelt. the depression was going on. roosevelt couldn't do nothing
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respond. hoover was a lame-.cal president. they decided to move it up so the new president could respond more quickly to a crisis. >> if it's on sunday, january 20th, do they have to move it? >> the constitution says the president must take the oath of office at noon on january 20th. that's been the tradition in the 20th century. back in the 19th century, they move it day. now the president takes the oath on sunday and takes it publicly on the 21st, but the constitution requires it's done on the 20th that this year he'll be sworn in on martin luther king day. what's the significance of that? >> a lot of symbolism. first he's using martin luther king's bible and lincoln's bible. we're talking about lincoln with the movie. this is the 150th anniversary of the emancipation proclamation. there's a monument.
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50 years after "i have a dream," there's a memorial. so this story of race, slavery, civil rights and its involvement in our history is so important, so i think it's really significant to have all these symbols together on this very, very significant day. >> president obama is the 44th american president and we've had 20 two-term presidents. how have two-term presidents faired? >> recently not so well if we think about the major controversies. they tend to come in the second term. i don't know if that's just a coincidence but they may not be. bill clinton's impeachment, of course. bush had a lot. richard nixon. watergate unfurls in the second term. for ronald reagan, iran con trachlt it bha that sometimes they've been around too long, they get a little sloppy, but some of those things preceded the second term as will. it hasn't always been the case.
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franklin d. roosevelt, we just saw in 1933. he had one major setback. he tried to go too far with the supreme court. >> thank you so much. >> always my pleasure. >> you're watching "cbs this morning."
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tomorrow on "cbs this morning saturday," a preview of the inauguration's events from our location. look at that. as they lead another day of national service to honor the reverend martin luther king jr., we'll ask the iii what he thinks
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of it. >> we've had an incredible week starting with oprah winfrey and lance armstrong. as we leave you, we take a look back at the week that was. have a great weekend. >> look that charlie rose move. >> from when? >> oh, the other day. >> what's on your bucket list? >> i want to learn how to speak spanish. >> how about that flu shot? anyway, moving right along -- >> don't you have something to do. >> gayle, i'm right with you. i haven't gotten mine yet. >> why didn't you get your flu shot. >> because there's that old wive's tale of if you get the flu shot, you get the flu. >> much better than having the flu. >> it's hard to define what an assault weapon is. the bottom line -- >> whit's not what do we do abo guns. it's what do we do to make guns
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safe. >> why did you use a word like that? >> i'm a capitalist. >> no one's talking to eat other about how to resolve this. >> they're in the process of evacuating americans out of algeria. >> language armstrong's lies seem to grow duper every day. >> he did not come clean in the manner i expected. >> he has offered to pay $5 million and they turned him down. >> why take $5 million when you're going to get $30 million or $120 million. >> an hour in we took a break and lance actually said will there be a point where you will lighten up? >> sounds like lance gave her a one-night subscription to "o." >> stephen colbert is very, very good. >> that was the eye opener. ♪ you ain't nothing but a hound dog ♪ >> still the largest audience
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ever to watch a single performance. >> what about the people you work with? i was saying my great perk is i get to work with charlie and gayle. >> don't be a buzz kill. >> wait a second. >> the great british butler is back with a vengeance, buffed to a high sheen, ready for action in the modern world. >> i was wondering if butlers shine vespas. >> i'll shine your vespa. >> are you aware that norah's husband is a chef? >> no, i wasn't. >> charlie's name dropping. he said he's got friends. >> i love the guy who said i did it as a christmas present for my life. does he love his wife? >> we brought a big 18-inch machete, 18-inch knife. >> do you know how to use it? >> no.
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never used it. i assume i swing it real hard. ♪ >> remember this [ female announcer ] back to school means back to busy mornings. that's why i got them pillsbury toaster strudel. warm flaky pastry
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